*****cam 22*****7a 4500BOOK-417EQUINOXPUB20240329014729.5120201 2012 at 000 0 eng d9781845536770HB £100.0 ($130.0)hardbackequinoxpubengequinoxpubToni BorowskyUniversity of SydneyToni BorowskyEditorShigeto KawaharaRutgers UniversityShigeto KawaharaEditorMariko SugaharaDoshisha UniversityMariko SugaharaEditorTakahito ShinyaOtsuma Women's UniversityTakahito ShinyaEditorKarimBensoukasMohammed V-Agdal UniversityKarim BensoukasAuthorAbdelazizBoudlalChouaib Doukkali UniversityAbdelaziz BoudlalAuthorJoe PaterUniversity of Massachusetts at Amherst.Joe PaterAuthorJenniferSmithUniversity of North CarolinaJennifer SmithAuthorHasanBasriHasan BasriAuthorEllenBroselowStony Brook UniversityEllen BroselowAuthorDanielFinerStony Brook UniversityDaniel FinerAuthorScottMyersUniversity of TexasScott MyersAuthorJayePadgettUniversity of California, Santa CruzJaye PadgettAuthorSamHellmuthUniversity of YorkSam HellmuthAuthorJunkoItoUniversity of California, Santa CruzJunko ItoAuthorArminMesterUniversity of California Santa CruzArmin MesterAuthorJohnMcCarthyUniversity of MassachusettsJohn J. McCarthyAuthorHisaoTokizakiSapporo UniversityHisao TokizakiAuthorKatyCarlsonMorehead UniversityKaty CarlsonAuthorCarolineFéryGoethe UniversityCaroline FéryAuthorMasakoHirotaniCarleton UniversityMasako HirotaniAuthorHubertTruckenbrodtZentrum für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Berlin and Humboldt Universität zu BerlinHubert TruckenbrodtAuthorProsody MattersEssays in Honor of Elisabeth SelkirkSheffield, United KingdomEquinox Publishing Ltd.The theory of prosodic hierarchy, proposed and developed by a series of work by Elisabeth O. Selkirk at the University of Massachusett at Amherst, has been one of the most important areas of research within phonological theory in the past few decades. This collection of original articles, dedicated to Selkirk, address a number of aspects of the theory using evidence from languages as diverse as Arabic, Berber, Chadic, Dutch, English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, and Russian.February 01, 2012544 p.234 x 156mmlinguistic theory; P101-410; phonologylinguisticsprosodic hierarchy; serial harmonic grammar; constraint theory; Optimality theoryhttp://www.equinoxpub.com/home/prosody-matters/